An application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) is a chip that is
designed and used for a specific purpose, such as video acceleration,
machine learning acceleration, and many more purposes. In contrast to
FPGAs, the programming of an ASIC is fixed at the time of
manufacture.

Binary data that is directly loaded into an FPGA to perform
configuration. Contains configuration frames as well as
programming sequences and other commands required to load and activate same.

Block RAM

Block RAM is inbuilt, configurable memory on an FPGA, able to store
more data than the flip flops. The block RAM can function as
dual or single-port memory. Xilinx 7 series devices offer a number of 36 Kb
block RAMs, each with two independently controlled 18 Kb RAMs. The number of
block RAMs available depends on the specific device.

CFA

A carry or fast adder (CFA) is a logic element on the FPGA that
performs fast arithmetic operations.

Clock

A clock is a square-wave timing signal (50% on, 50% off) generated by an
external oscillator and passed into the FPGA. The clock frequency
drives the sequential logic elements in the FPGA, most importantly
the flip flops. For example, the FPGA may use a
50 megahertz clock. An FGPA can use one or more clocks and can thus have
one or more clock domains.

Clock backbone

Clock spine

In Xilinx 7 series devices, the clock backbone or clock spine divides the
clock regions on the device into two sides, the left
and the right side.

Clock domain

Portion of the device controlled by one clock. A clock domain is
part of a horizontal clock row to one side of the global
clock spine. The term also often refers to the
tiles that are associated with these clocks.

Clock region

Portion of a device including up to 12 clock domains.
A clock region is situated to the left or right of the global clock spine,
and is 50 CLBs tall on Xilinx 7 series devices. The clock
region includes all synchronous elements in the 50 CLBs and one I/O bank,
with a horizontal clock row at its center.

Column

A term used in bitstream configuration to denote
a collection of tiles, physically organized as
a vertical line, and configured by the same set of configuration frames.
Logic columns span 50 tiles vertically and 2 tiles horizontally
(pairs of logic tiles and interconnect tiles).

Configurable logic block

CLB

A configurable logic block (CLB) is the configurable logic unit of an
FPGA. Also called a logic cell. A CLB is a combination of basic
logic elements (BELs).

A field-programmable gate array (FPGA) is a reprogrammable integrated
circuit, or chip. Reprogrammable means you can reconfigure the integrated
circuit for different types of computing. You define the configuration via a
hardware definition language (HDL). The word “field” in
field-programmable gate array means the circuit is programmable
in the field, as opposed to during chip manufacture.

Frame

The fundamental unit of bitstream configuration data consisting of
101 words.
Each frame has a 32-bit frame address and 101 payload words, 32 bits each.
The 50th payload word is an EEC.
The 7 LSB bits of the frame address are the frame index within the
configuration column (called minor frame address in the Xilinx
documentation). The rest of the frame address identifies the configuration
column (called base frame address in Project X-Ray nomenclature).

The bits in an individual frame are spread out over the entire column.
For example, in a logic column with 50 tiles, the first tile is configured
with the first two words in each frame, the next tile with the next two
words, and so on.

Frame base address

The first configuration frame address for a column. A frame base
address has always the 7 LSB bits cleared.

Fuzzer

Scripts and a makefile to generate one or more specimens
and then convert the data from those specimens into a database.

Half

Portion of a device defined by a virtual line dividing the two sets of
global clock buffers present in a device. The two halves are
referred to as the top and bottom halves.

HDL

You use a hardware definition language (HDL) to describe the behavior of an
electronic circuit. Popular HDLs include Verilog (inspired by C) and VHDL
(inspired by Ada).

Horizontal clock row

HROW

Portion of a device including 12 horizontal clocks and the
50 interconnect and function tiles associated with them. A half
contains one or more horizontal clock rows and each half may have a
different number of rows.

I/O block

One of the configurable input/output blocks that connect the FPGA
to external devices.

Interconnect tile

INT

An interconnect tile (INT_L, INT_R) is used to connect other tiles to
the fabric. It is also frequently called a switch box.

LUT

A lookup table (LUT) is a logic element on the FPGA. LUTs function
as a ROM, apply combinatorial logic, and generate the output value for a
given set of inputs.

MUX

A multiplexer (MUX) is a multi-input, single-output switch controled by
logic.

Node

A routing node on the device. A node is a collection of wires
spanning one or more tiles.
Nodes that are local to a tile map 1:1 to a wire. A node that spans multiple
tiles maps to multiple wires, one in each tile it spans.

PIP

Programmable interconnect point

A programmable interconnect point (PIP) is a connection point between two
wires in a tile that may be enabled or disabled by the configuration.

PnR

Place and route

Place and route (PnR) is the process of taking logic and placing it into
hardware logic elements on the FPGA, and then routing the signals
between the placed elements.

Region of interest

ROI

Region of interest (ROI) is used in Project X-Ray to denote a
rectangular region on the FPGA that is the focus of our study.
The current region of interest is SLICE_X12Y100:SLICE_X27Y149
on a xc7a50tfgg484-1 chip.

Routing fabric

The wires and programmable interconnects (PIPs)
connecting the logic blocks in an FPGA.

Segment

All configuration bits for a horizontal slice of a column.
This corresponds to two ranges: a range of frames
and a range of words within frames. A segment of a logic
column is 36 frames wide and 2 words high.

Site

Portion of a tile where BELs can be placed. The
slices in a CLB tile are sites.

Slice

Portion of a tile that contains BELs.
A CLBLL_L/CLBLL_R tile contains two SLICEL slices.
A CLBLM_L/CLBLM_R tile contains one SLICEL slice and one SLICEM slice.
SLICEL and SLICEM are the most common types of slice, containing the
LUTs and flip flops that are the basic logic
units of the FPGA.

Specimen

A bitstream of a (usually auto-generated) design with additional
files containing information about the placed and routed design.
These additional files are usually generated using Vivado TCL scripts
querying the Vivado design database.

Tile

Fundamental unit of physical structure containing a single type of
resource or function. A container for sites and
slices. The FPGA chip is a grid of tiles.

The most important tile types are left and right interconnect tiles
(INT_L and INT_R) and left and right CLB logic/memory tiles
(CLBLL_L, CLBLL_R, CLBLM_L, CLBLM_R).